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Lee Jeans sit-in success?
The BBC reports the 30th anniversary of the Lee Jeans factory sit-in in Greenock, which it calls a “a highly significant chapter in Scottish labour relations”. At an event at the Scottish Parliament yesterday, Duncan McNeil, Labour MSP for Greenock and Inverclyde, called it “a landmark victory against a US multinational”.
After a seven-month sit-in in 1981, a management buy-out saved the factory, and the 140 protesting workers were re-employed. It was hailed a great victory.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-12703205 (recent news story)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-12366211 (a bit of history)
Two years later, in June 1983, the new management called in receivers, and the factory closed.
Is the sit-in something to celebrate? Or just a sad footnote in the history of Scotland's industrial decline?
After a seven-month sit-in in 1981, a management buy-out saved the factory, and the 140 protesting workers were re-employed. It was hailed a great victory.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-12703205 (recent news story)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-12366211 (a bit of history)
Two years later, in June 1983, the new management called in receivers, and the factory closed.
Is the sit-in something to celebrate? Or just a sad footnote in the history of Scotland's industrial decline?
no subject
The really interesting aspect of the story was the implied attempt by NI to “poach” an international company from Scotland. Grants to develop businesses in deprived areas are commonplace, and should be more controversial.
I remember my father’s business having problems competing with companies manufacturing similar products; companies that were supported by government and EU grants and tax breaks because of where they were located.
There has been a recent controversy over tax breaks for computer games companies in Scotland; I feel uneasy about the distorting effect of government support for industry.
(Of course nowadays, with all the cuts, there isn’t the money for grants or tax breaks…)